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Sew Very Useful Neck Cooler

Boy, is it ever summer here in the Midwest! What can we do to beat the heat other than staying inside like houseplants? Sport a water-activated neck cooler and feel several degrees cooler! Made of 100% cotton material and polymer crystals, these are easy to make and feel great!

Makes a great gift for anyone whose job or recreation puts them in a warm environment.

Servicemen and women stationed in hot areas really appreciate these. As much as some of them might like bright coolers like the one below, regulations state they must be green camo, desert camo, tan, or military green so keep this in mind if making some to send in care packages.

Step 1: Gather All Materials

Materials:100% cotton fabric (prewash all fabric so that colors will not bleed when cooler is wet)threadWater absorbing polymer crystals (see suppliers below*)

Tools:Scissors or rotary cutter and matsewing machine or hand-sewing needle

*The most common brand of crystals is Watersorb. You can visit their website here: Watersorb. You can also sometimes find them at gardening centers as these are the type of crystals you add to containers to help them retain moisture.

Safety tip: Crystals are nontoxic but if eaten dry, they will expand. If a small dog or child eats a bellyful of dry crystals, it could cause problems. Please keep loose crystals away from pets and kids.

Step 2: Create Fabric Tube

Cut fabric into a strip 4 1/2 inches wide by 40-45 inches long. This can most easily be done by cutting from selvage to selvage. (Selvage are the finished edges of the fabric as opposed to the raw edges that fray.)

Fold right sides together along a long edge and pin. Sew along the edge to create a long tube.

Step 3: Turn and Press

Turn the tube right side out. Press (iron) the length of the tube with the seam at the center, not at a fold.

Step 4: Stitch Across and Add Crystals

Find the center of the tube and stitch across the center. Make sure to lock your stitches each time by backstitching a few stitches so the dry crystals won't shift.

Using a funnel, fill both halves of the tube with 1/4-1/2 teaspoon of crystals. Shake them down until they reach the center seam. Do not be tempted to use more. The crystals hold a tremendous amount of water and will swell many times their dry size. Too many crystals could put stress on the seams as well as make the gel ooze out of the fabric's weave making it feel slimy.

Meaure 4 1/2 inches to each side of your center mark and stitch across the tube again at these marks. Repeat the addition of 1/4-1/2 teaspoon of crystals to both sides.

Measure 4 1/2 inches from your last stitch lines and sew across to form a second pocket on each side. You should now have four pockets filled with 1/8th teaspoon of crystals.

Step 5: Finish Ends.

Cut your ends at an angle and fold the edges inward to create a hem. Iron flat and sew across this hem to finish your cooler.

Step 6: How to Use.

Soak your neck cooler in water for 30 minutes to activate the crystals. After the first 10-15 minutes, smoosh the crystals around to evenly distribute them in each pocket, then soak for the remaining time. Once it has expanded, lightly squeegee the excess water off the outside with your hand if you don't want it to drip on you too much.

Tie around you neck (or your dog's neck) and enjoy the cool, evaporative effect. It should keep you cool for 3-5 hours depending on the temperature outside. To regenerate it's cooling effect, simply soak it in cool water for a few minutes (1-3 minutes should do) and replace around your neck.

Your cooler can also be a heating pad. Soak in water as for cooling, then pop it in the microwave for 30 seconds!

Care: When you want to store the cooler, just let it sit out on a counter to dry completely and it will return to it's flat state. Hand wash in mild soap.

And for safety's sake, always wear sunscreen and keep hydrate when you are in the sun!

Hi. It takes 100-125 dry swelled crystals to fill a 4-1/2" section. I poured dry crystals in a jar and let them swell into a large pea size, then put beads on my section and counted. Wow. Easier to count. I also freeze my scarves to set faster in the high desert heat of 100-118 weather. My pilot friends and civil air patrol members will like them.

I have used the railroad version and love them. They are made with a knit fabric that stretches in all directions and doesn't mold. Then I bought a cotton one which ripped the first time I squeezed extra water out and grew mold because it was wet for two days.

In this step, you mention, twice, filling the different sections with 1/4-1/2 teaspoon of the crystals. Then, in the last sentence you say, "You should now have four pockets filled with 1/8th teaspoon of crystals." Can you just clarify if that last line is a typo? Thanks. Great job, BTW! I may have to see about getting some of these made for my Cub Scout Pack.

I think the most you should use would be 2 tsp per necktie. I am going to make these to send to our troops. There is an organization collection at the NC State Fair Ground this year and they mentioned these as one of the items to send to our troops. I searched online and saw several places to purchase, and then saw this to make. It would be so much more economical to make! These would also be great for women experiencing hot flashes too!

There is a contradiction in the amount of crystals in each pocket. The instruction say to put 1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon in each pocket, and the summary says you should have 1/8 teaspoon of crystals in each pocket. Anyone know which is the correct amount? Thank

i think the Dollar Tree stores has these...in a round cylinder bottle container, but already hydrated, ready to use, but maybe too large as they're round beads, just a tad smaller than a marble...I'm going to try putting a few of these out to "dry"...cant hurt as each container, is only $1...go figure! LoL..and if using a diaper, good idea!

I was wondering about using used diapers for my garden...just pee, no poopered diapers for sure...I worked in a medical lab, so pee doesn't bother me like does most people...but people don't understand that our sweat is also pee, just hasn't come out of our bladders!...poop is different and is why it stinks...so would never put that in our garden!...Google search what I'm saying and you will see sweat in a very different light!

I purchased Miracle-Gro water storing crystals I might have used a little to much. I put it in the refrigerator and it really grew hard and some of the beads seem to melt out through the material, is this because of the beads or that I filled it to full.